Food for Thought
Thursday, November 8 &ndash; 11:00 am &ndash; 12:00 pm
What you eat affects how your brain functions and can influence mood disorders. Join Barbara Shukitt-Hale, Ph.D. to learn how fruits and vegetables high in antioxidants can slow the progression of age-related neurological disease.
This event is co-hosted by Cambridge Neighbors, the 2nd aging in community village in the U.S., the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University, and the Cambridge Public Library. To sign up, visit www.eventbrite.com/e/food-for-thought-tickets-49144232723 or call Cambridge Neighbors at 617-864-1715.

Children ages 2-3 and their caregivers.
This program can accommodate 45 people. Tickets are available on a first-come, first served basis on the day of the program. The entire party must be present to receive a ticket. This program starts promptly, and unfortunately we cannot accommodate latecomers. Unclaimed seats will be offered to someone waiting. We appreciate your patience and understanding.
Please call 617-349-4038 for more information.

English class for the non-native speaker: this class focuses on speaking.
Students will practice public speaking and will work on developing clear speech. For ages 16 and up. On-going. No registration is necessary.
Contact:
Maria Balestrieri, mbalestrieri@cambridgema.gov

Put on your dancing shoes and head over for an afternoon of singing and dancing! All ages.
This program can accommodate 130 people. Tickets are available on a first-come, first-served basis on the day of the program. The entire party must be present to receive a ticket. This program starts promptly, and unfortunately we cannot accommodate latecomers. Unclaimed seats will be offered to someone waiting. We appreciate your patience and understanding.
Please call 617-349-4038 for more information.

In September of 1926, Henry Beston Sheahan went for a short vacation to a small cottage on the sand dunes two miles south of the Coast Guard station at Nauset, on Cape Cod. Beston had intended to stay for 2 weeks, but, as he recounted later, he stayed for a whole year because &quot;The beauty and mystery of this earth and outer sea so possessed and held me that I could not go.&quot; Beston chronicled his experiences in the Outermost House considered by many to be a classic of American literature and a seminal work that influenced today&rsquo;s environmental movement.
Prepared in collaboration with the Henry Beston Society, David Donovan&#39;s talk brings to life the complex idealist whose writings shaped the work of the environmental movement in the United States.

English class for the non-native speaker: this class focuses on speaking.
Students will practice public speaking and will work on developing clear speech. For ages 16 and up. On-going. No registration is necessary.
Contact:
Maria Balestrieri, mbalestrieri@cambridgema.gov